after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
Metcalf Brothers & Company, judgment creditors of Lesser Brothers, commenced their creditors’ suit in the Supreme Court of New York, December 17, 1896. The case came to trial December 17, 1897, and decree was rendered April 6, 1898.
The bankruptcy law was approved July 1,1898. May 12,1899, Lesser Brothers filed their petition in bankruptcy and were adjudicated bankrupts, and Barker was appointed trustee June Y, 1899. March 8, 1900, the bankrupts’ trustee procured from the District Court an order entitled in the bankruptcy proceedings requiring Metcalf Brothers & Company to show cause on March 13 why a writ of injunction should not issue enjoining them from taking any further proceedings under any judgment in their creditors’ action, and so enjoining them in the interim, which injunction, after argument on the merits, was continued. No question arises here in respect of real estate, and on the case stated in the certificate the property affected was equitable assets. There had been tangible personal property, *172 subject to levy and sale under execution, but this had been previously sold by an order of the Supreme Court of New York and the proceeds were held by receivers.
The general rule is that the filing of a judgment creditors’ bill and service of process creates a lien in equity on the judgment debtor’s equitable assets.
Miller
v. Sherry,
Assuming that the judgment at special term is. to be disregarded, and that the judgment of the appellate division was entered within the four months, it will be perceived that if the views of the District Court were correct, the third question propounded should be answered in the negative, while if incorrect, that question should be answered in the affirmative.
Doubtless the lien created by a judgment' creditors’ bill is contingent in the sense that it might possibly be defeated by the event of the suit, but in itself, and so long as it exists, it is a charge, a specific lien, on the assets, not subject to being divested save by payment of the judgment sought to be collected.
*173 The subject was fully discussed and the effect of bankruptcy proceedings considered by Vice Chancellor Sandford in Storm v. Waddell, 2 Sandf. Ch. 494, which has been so repeatedly recognized with approval as to have become a leading case.
As Mr. Justice Swayne remarked in
Miller
v.
Sherry,
the commencement of the suit amounts to an equitable levy,
Kittredge v. Warren, 14 N. H. 509, was relied on as to the effect of attachments on mesne process in Hew Hampshire in Peck v. Jenness. And it may be remarked that Chief Justice Parker’s vigorous discussion in that case of the point that the attachment lien was not contingent on a subsequent judgment is a fortiori applicable in cases where the prior establishment of the creditor’s claim is the foundation of the creditor’s suit.
Granting that possession of the power “ to establish uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies ” enables Congress to displace these well-settled principles and to divest rights so acquired, we do not think that Congress has attempted to do so.
Section 67f provides : “ That all levies, judgments, attachments, or other liens, obtained through legal proceedings against a person who is insolvent, at any time within four months prior to the filing of a petition in bankruptcy against him, shall be deemed null and void in case he is adjudged a bankrupt, and the property affected by the levy, judgment, attachment, or other lien shall be deemed wholly discharged and released from the same, and shall pass to the trustee as a part of the estate of the bankrupt, unless the court shall, on due notice, order that the right under such levy, judgment, attachment, or other lien *174 shall be preserved for the benefit of the estate; and thereupon the same may pass to and shall be preserved by the trustee for the benefit of the estate as aforesaid. And the court may order such conveyance as shall be necessary to carry the purposes of this section into effect.”
In our opinion the conclusion to be drawn from this language is that it is the lien created by a levy, or a judgment, or an attachment, or otherwise, that is invalidated, and that where the lien is obtained more than four months prior to the filing of the petition, it is not only not to be deemed to be null and void on adjudication, but its validity is recognized. When it is obtained within four months the property is discharged therefrom, but not otherwise. A judgment or decree in enforcement of an otherwise valid preexisting lien is not the judgment denounced by the statute, which is plainly confined to judgments creating liens. If this were not so the date of the acquisition of a lien by attachment or creditor’s bill would be entirely immaterial.
Moreover other provisions of the act render it unreasonable to impute the intention to annul all judgments recovered within four .months.
By section 68a, fixed liabilities evidenced by judgments absolutely owing at the time of the filing of the petition, or founded upon provable debts reduced to judgments after the filing of the petition and before the consideration of application for discharge, may be proved and allowed, while under section 17 judgments in actions of fraud are not released by a discharge, and other parts of the act would be wholly unnecessary if section 61 f must be taken literally.
Many of the District Courts have reached and announced a similar conclusion:
In re
Blair, 108 Fed. Rep. 529;
In re Beaver Coal Company,
110 Fed. Rep. 630;
In re Kavanaugh,
99 Fed. Rep. 928;
In re Pease,
4 Amer. Bank. Rep. 547; as have also the Supreme Court of Rhode Island and the Chancery Court of New Jersey in well considered decisions.
Doyle
v.
Heath,
22 R. I. 213;
Taylor v. Taylor,
59 N. J. Eq. 86. And see
Wakeman
v.
Throckmorton,
As under section 10a, e, and section 67<e, the trustee is vested with the bankrupt’s title as of the date of the adjudication, and *175 subrogated to the rights of creditors, the foregoing considerations require an affirmative answer to the third question, but in- answering the first question some further observations must be made. This creditors’ action was commenced December 17, 1896, more than eighteen months before the passage of the bankruptcy act, and was prosecuted with exemplary diligence to final and complete success in the judgment of the Court of Appeals. At this point the bankruptcy court intervened and on summary proceedings enjoined Metcalf Brothers & Company from receiving the fruits of their victory. The state courts had jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter, and possession of the property. ■ And it is well settled that where property is in the actual possession of the court, this draws to it the right to decide upon conflicting claims to its ultimate possession and control.
In
Peck
v.
Jenness,
White
v.
Schloerb,
This cautious utterance — and courts must be cautious when dealing with a conflict of jurisdiction — sustains as far as it goes *177 the converse of the proposition when presented by a different state of facts.
We are of opinion that the jurisdiction of the District Court to make the injunction order in question cannot be maintained.
Louisville Trust Company
v. Comingor,
The first question will be answered in the negative, and tte third question in the affirmative, and it is unnecessary to answer the other questions.
Certificate accordingly.
Notes
Affirmed by this court sub nomine Pickens v. Roy, p. 177, post.
